Behind the New York Times pay wall, you only get 10 free clicks a month. For those worried about hitting their limit, we're taking a look through the paper each morning to find the stories that can make your clicks count.

Top Stories: A 17-year-old high school student in Britain sold Summly, a "news-reading app," to Yahoo for tens of millions of dollars, a sale that "conjured up some feelings of inadequacy, but also awe."

World: The growing number of sexual assaults in Egypt has set off a conflict between conservatives Islamists who blame women, and women who are speaking out and "defying social taboos."

U.S.: Bill Clinton's change of tune on the Defense of Marriage Act "mirrors larger changes in society as same-sex marriage has gone from a fringe idea to one with a majority."

New York: Colleagues and friends describe mayoral candidate Christine Quinn as a woman who, in private, can be "controlling, temperamental and surprisingly volatile, with a habit of hair-trigger eruptions of unchecked, face-to-face wrath."

Business: A "highly unusual" turn of events at the law firm DLA Piper has revealed emails with "documentary evidence of possible churning — the creation of unnecessary work to drive up a client's bill."

Health: An excerpt from Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal in which the author describes visiting with scientists that study how we chew.

Sports: Teams that beat Florida Gulf Coast now "watched the drama play out with a mix of curiosity and pride."

Opinion: David Cole on believing that "in the Prop 8 case, the court should decide not to decide the gay marriage issue at all."

Art & Design: The family Merton D. Simpson, a collector who has museum-quality art, also doesn't have money for a burial.